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Cerebral Palsy v1.276 ERCC8 Zornitza Stark Publications for gene: ERCC8 were set to 33528536; 30279719
Cerebral Palsy v1.275 ERCC8 Clare van Eyk reviewed gene: ERCC8: Rating: GREEN; Mode of pathogenicity: None; Publications: PMID: 38693247; Phenotypes: Cockayne syndrome MIM#216400; Mode of inheritance: BIALLELIC, autosomal or pseudoautosomal
Cerebral Palsy v1.49 ERCC8 Zornitza Stark Marked gene: ERCC8 as ready
Cerebral Palsy v1.49 ERCC8 Zornitza Stark Gene: ercc8 has been classified as Green List (High Evidence).
Cerebral Palsy v1.49 ERCC8 Zornitza Stark Classified gene: ERCC8 as Green List (high evidence)
Cerebral Palsy v1.49 ERCC8 Zornitza Stark Gene: ercc8 has been classified as Green List (High Evidence).
Cerebral Palsy v1.36 ERCC8 Luisa Weiss changed review comment from: One large CP cohort study with 3 unrelated patients with biallelic mutations in ERCC8. Two were point mutations (one missense, one nonsense), the other a large deletion that included ERCC8 and NDUFAF2-gene. Another case report of a boy that was initially diagnosed as having CP but later re-diagnosed as having Cockayne syndrome due to biallelic ERCC8 mutations.
Sources: Literature; to: One large CP cohort study with 3 unrelated patients with biallelic mutations in ERCC8. Two were point mutations (one missense, one nonsense), the other a large deletion that included ERCC8 and NDUFAF2-gene. Another case report of a boy that was initially diagnosed as having CP but later re-diagnosed as having Cockayne syndrome due to biallelic ERCC8 mutations because of disease progression.
Sources: Literature
Cerebral Palsy v1.36 ERCC8 Luisa Weiss gene: ERCC8 was added
gene: ERCC8 was added to Cerebral Palsy. Sources: Literature
Mode of inheritance for gene: ERCC8 was set to BIALLELIC, autosomal or pseudoautosomal
Publications for gene: ERCC8 were set to 33528536; 30279719
Phenotypes for gene: ERCC8 were set to Cockayne syndrome MIM#216400
Review for gene: ERCC8 was set to GREEN
Added comment: One large CP cohort study with 3 unrelated patients with biallelic mutations in ERCC8. Two were point mutations (one missense, one nonsense), the other a large deletion that included ERCC8 and NDUFAF2-gene. Another case report of a boy that was initially diagnosed as having CP but later re-diagnosed as having Cockayne syndrome due to biallelic ERCC8 mutations.
Sources: Literature